JOHN SURMAN
with Jack DeJohnette
& London Brass
Free and Equal
ECM
Read the Jazzitude
Review of John Surman & Jack DeJohnette/Invisible
Nature
The title of John Surman’s latest release
refers to the fact that the brass ensemble that accompanies
Surman and drummer/pianist Jack DeJohnette plays music that
is entirely notated, while the two principals improvise
freely. Unlike many such jazz meets chamber music collaborations,
however, the two groups here are truly equals. There is
blurring of the lines between the groups, too, as DeJohnette’s
piano part over the first two sections is written and London
Brass members Richard Edwards (trombone), John Barclay (trumpet),
and Richard Bissill (French horn) improvise briefly in bridges
between sections of the piece. There’s further blurring,
as always with Surman, of the line between composition and
improvisation. For the English woodwind player par excellence,
skill with improvisation has always been a major facet of
his work, but more recently his compositional skills have
come to the fore, and the blending of these elements has
led to several highly satisfying recordings, including Corruscating
and 2002’s Invisible Nature, another live improvisation
with DeJohnette.
Surman is influenced not only by jazz and
chamber music, but, like his labelmate Jan Gabarek, by folk
music. In Surman’s case the folk music in question
is that of his native British Isles, and the lyrical quality
with which it infuses his playing and his composition is
remarkable. This quality can be heard immediately in Surman’s
first entrance on soprano sax during “Preamble”;
the piece sounds like an old English air. The brass section
that follows on “Goundwork” has a similarly
pastoral feel, with Surman leapfrogging over and around
the swirling trumpet figure and DeJohnette’s trancelike
piano line. The piece builds in complexity, concluding with
a freely improvised section featuring Surman’s bass
clarinet, Bissill’s French Horn, and some tympanic
mallet rolls from DeJohnette.
“Sea Change” brings more rhythmic
drive to the proceedings, as the brass section builds to
a roar and DeJohnette opens up on full drum set, demonstrating
why he is one of jazz and improvisational music’s
greatest drummers. After a brief DeJohnette solo the brass
returns with a somewhat martial section, that loosens into
a swinging beat until Surman’s baritone sax explodes
through like the proverbial sea serpent. What follows is
five minutes of incredibly swinging improvisation, as DeJohnette
and Surman flirt with a modified calypso that recalls the
collaborations between Sonny Rollins and Max Roach. The
following two tracks, “Back and Forth” and “Fire”
feature DeJohnette underpinning improvisational work by
trombonist Edwards and trumpeter Barclay, and it’s
a tribute to these musicians that their work stands up very
well next to Surman’s work on “Sea Change”
and “Debased Line,” where he manages to coax
a near-alto sax sound from his bass clarinet at times.
The last movements continue to add depth to
the overall composition and will delight listeners who have
enjoyed the CD up to this point. “In the Shadow”
has a lovely lilt to it, and both Surman and DeJohnette
play with a lightness and playfulness that balances some
of the more austere earlier sections. “Free and Equal”
features a highly structured horn chart that drives forward,
propelled by DeJohnette’s vital drumming and embellished
with Surman’s deft soprano arabesques. DeJohnette
brings the piece to a conclusion with a drum solo that features
a keen use of dynamics to hold the listener’s interest.
The brass re-enters, providing a droning, foreboding foundation
for DeJohnette’s constant motion, ending with what
sounds much like a hymn. The minute or so of heartfelt applause
that greets the musicians at the end of the performance
is testament to the spell that Surman, DeJohnette, and London
Brass cast with this well-balanced performance. Over the
course of three albums together in the past twenty years
Surman and DeJohnette have proven to be an interesting and
ever-evolving improvisational duo. Here’s to more
work together by these masters of improvisation.